黑洞社区鈥檚 Woman of the Year award is a new award designed to recognise and promote the achievements of women working in construction. Seven inspirational women were shortlisted but one of them had the edge
Kate Corrigan
Kate Corrigan, Turner & Townsend鈥檚 youngest ever female director, is the winner of the inaugural award. Our judges said she is 鈥渃learly making a difference鈥 in the firm as well as within the sector, promoting diversity, addressing the skills shortage and performing in her own area of expertise, cost management, at the highest level. Corrigan鈥檚 achievements include setting up Turner & Townsend鈥檚 Addressing the Balance forum to look at how to attract, retain and develop the industry鈥檚 best women. This led to Corrigan, who is a senior commercial manager on the Thames Tideway Tunnel, being invited to chair the Tideway Inclusivity Programme. Corrigan has also helped the RICS expand into the infrastructure sector, developing the new Pathway and sharing her knowledge of best practice in procurement.
Jen Bousfield, Arup
Associate chartered public health engineer Jen Bousfield is a true champion of professional development within Arup. Bousfield became one of only 12 female fellows of CIBSE in 2011. As a member of the CIBSE Membership and Registration Committee, Bousfield conducts professional competence review interviews for the body. She also assists in the co-ordination of the development of Arup staff and establishes the training framework for apprentices.
Caroline Buckingham, HLM Architects
鈥淎 risen star鈥 was how one judge described Caroline Buckingham. The shareholder, board director and head of education at HLM Architects is focused on developing HLM鈥檚 education sector work. Buckingham recently delivered the concept design for a university project in Abu Dhabi, and is now advising the Abu Dhabi Education Council on the refurbishment of its estate. Buckingham chairs RIBA鈥檚 large practice group and sits on the RIBA practice and professional committee.
Julia Lydall, Turner & Townsend
Our judges thought that senior cost manager Julia Lydall was a 鈥渞ising star鈥. Lydall has worked on a voluntary basis on key industry goals, including addressing the skills shortage, improving diversity and promoting collaboration. Perhaps Lydall鈥檚 most proactive move was to appoint herself apprentice development manager, taking on the recruitment and co-ordination of apprentices. Lydall is also a founding member of the firm鈥檚 Addressing the Balance diversity focus group.
Siobhan McMahon, Emerald Architects
After living long term with an MS diagnosis and being made redundant last year, architect Siobhan McMahon launched her own practice in May. Her Durham-based company Emerald Architects has already won projects including a contract to provide interior design consultancy on a national biologics manufacturing centre in Darlington for the Centre for Process Innovation. In the same period McMahon took over as chair of the National Association of Women in Construction.
Nazma Uddin, Rise Management Consulting
The judges shortlisted project manager Nazma Uddin, above all, on her 鈥渋nclusive approach鈥. Uddin has great skill in bringing together people of different professions, genders, ethnicities and social backgrounds to work collaboratively. This skill was demonstrated last year in Uddin鈥檚 delivery of the fast-moving Serpentine Pavilion project, where professionals within the arts had to work alongside architects from overseas as well as an array of private benefactors.
Julie Wood, Arup
Civil and structural engineer Julie Wood is a 鈥減eople person鈥, one of our judges said, who is strikingly 鈥渃ommercially successful鈥. As Arup鈥檚 global leader for project and programme management (PMM), Wood leads a 拢20m business with a worldwide team of around 100 people. The income of the PMM business has increased dramatically since she took it on in 2010 and in 2014 a target of 25% of PPM including programme management capacity was achieved.
This award was sponsored by Aecom.
No comments yet